A conveyor belt and a weighing system for weighing articles conveyed on a conveyor belt. The conveyor belt includes an array of force-sensing elements embedded in the belt to measure forces normal to the belt's conveying surface. The force-sensing elements form parts of passive resonant circuits that each include a capacitor and an inductive coil. Either the capacitor or the inductive coil can be a force-sensitive element. measuring circuits external to the belt include an oscillator having a coil that inductively couples to the resonant circuit in the belt as it passes closely by. A force applied to the belt at a force-sensitive element changes the resonant frequency of its resonant circuit, which also causes a change in the oscillator frequency. frequency detectors in the measuring circuits measure that frequency change and convert it into a proportional force value used to compute the weights of conveyed articles on the fly.
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13. A force-sensing system comprising:
a conveyor belt including:
a belt body having a top side and an opposite bottom side;
a plurality of passive resonant circuits disposed at individual positions within the belt body, each of the passive resonant circuits having a resonant frequency and including:
a force-sensitive element changing the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit as a function of a force applied to the force-sensitive element;
a plurality of measuring circuits disposed external to and near the bottom side of the conveyor belt, each of the measuring circuits including:
an oscillator oscillating at a nominal frequency and coupled to one of the passive resonant circuits as the conveyor belt passes;
wherein the passive resonant circuits are energized by the measuring circuits only when the measuring circuits are coupled to the passive resonant circuits as they pass closely by;
wherein the changes in the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit change the frequency of the oscillator from its nominal frequency as a function of the force applied to the force-sensitive element.
1. A weighing system comprising:
a conveyor belt including:
a belt body having a top side and an opposite bottom side;
a plurality of passive resonant circuits disposed at individual positions within the belt body, each of the passive resonant circuits having a resonant frequency and including:
a force-sensitive element changing the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit as a function of the force applied from conveyed articles on the top surface to the force-sensitive element;
a plurality of measuring circuits external to and disposed near the bottom side of the conveyor belt, each of the measuring circuits including:
an oscillator oscillating at a nominal frequency and coupled to one of the passive resonant circuits as the conveyor belt passes;
wherein the passive resonant circuits are energized by the measuring circuits only when the measuring circuits are coupled to the passive resonant circuits as they pass closely by;
wherein the changes in the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit change the frequency of the oscillator from its nominal frequency as a function of the force applied by conveyed articles on the top side of the conveyor belt to the force-sensitive element.
2. A weighing system as in
3. A weighing system as in
4. A weighing system as in
a capacitor; and
an inductive coil electrically connected to the capacitor;
wherein one of the inductive coil and the capacitor is the force-sensitive element.
5. A weighing system as in
8. A weighing system as in
9. A weighing system as in
10. A weighing system as in
11. A weighing system as in
12. A weighing system as in
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The invention relates generally to power-driven conveyors and more particularly to conveyor systems having force-sensitive elements embedded in a conveyor belt to weigh conveyed articles on the fly.
In some applications, individual articles have to be separately weighed while they are being transported on a conveyor belt. Conventional conveyor belt systems first singulate the conveyed articles so that they can be weighed sequentially at a weigh station the belt rides over. Singulating conveyor sections have to be inserted into the conveyor upstream of the weigh station to force the articles into a single file. Adding a singulating section to a conveyor system increases the length of the conveyor layout and reduces the usable width of the conveying surface. Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2000-249591 A, published Sep. 14, 2000, describes load cells in load-detecting units mounted single file atop the chain. And International Application Publication No. WO 2013/028378 A2, published Feb. 28, 2013, describes a conveyor belt with load cells distributed along its length and width. But both those systems require power supplies and transmitters to be located on or in the belt or chain to power the load cells and associated electronics.
One version of a conveyor belt embodying features of the invention comprises a belt body having an upper surface and a plurality of passive resonant circuits disposed at individual positions in the belt body. Each of the passive resonant circuits has a resonant frequency and includes a force-sensitive element. The force-sensitive element changes the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit as a function of the force applied to the force-sensitive element.
In another aspect of the invention, a weighing system embodying features of the invention comprises a conveyor belt and a number of measuring circuits near the bottom side of the conveyor belt. The conveyor belt includes a plurality of passive resonant circuits disposed at individual positions on the conveyor belt. Each of the passive resonant circuits has a resonant frequency and includes a force-sensitive element that changes the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit as a function of the force applied from conveyed articles on the top side of the belt to the force-sensitive element. Each of the measuring circuits includes an oscillator oscillating at a nominal frequency. An inductive coil in each measuring circuit inductively couples the oscillator to one of the passive resonant circuits near the inductive coil as the conveyor belt passes. The changes in the resonant frequency of the passive resonant circuit change the frequency of the oscillator from its nominal frequency as a function of the force applied by conveyed articles on the top side of the conveyor belt to the force-sensitive element.
These features and aspects of the invention, as well as its advantages, are described in more detail in the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, in which:
A portion of one version of a conveyor belt embodying features of the invention is shown in
The conveyor belt 10 is shown in a weighing system 30 in
As shown in
A cross section of one belt row is shown in
As shown in
Another version of a force-sensitive capacitor is shown in
A block diagram of one load cell of a weighing system is shown in
A more detailed circuit diagram is shown in
The op amp 94 is operated single-ended with its upper voltage rail at a positive voltage V (e.g., +5 Vdc) and its lower voltage rail at ground. The positively biased sinusoidal waveform 98 produced by the oscillator 68 is buffered in an emitter-follower op amp 100 circuit serving as a buffer amplifier with high input impedance so as not to load the oscillator circuit. The buffered oscillator signal is applied to the frequency counter. The frequency counter may be realized with analog and digital logic circuits or with a microcontroller.
In
When the resonant circuit 61 in the belt is far from the oscillator 68, the oscillator's nominal frequency fn, is unaffected by the resonant circuit. As the belt advances and the resonant circuit 61 comes in close proximity to the oscillator 68, the interaction between the two circuits increases. The oscillator's frequency changes from its nominal frequency fn. The frequency detector detects that change in frequency. When the frequency detector is implemented as a frequency counter in a microcontroller as previously described, the cycle count in the predetermined interval is a measure of the force acting on the capacitor 56 in the belt. Because the frequency change is also a function of the proximity of the belt coil 60 to the oscillator coil 64, a microcontroller routine reports the maximum change in frequency from nominal as the best measure of the force applied to the belt capacitor 56. The microcontroller converts the cycle count to a weight value. The microcontroller 71 may be connected to a user interface including an output display 104 and a manual input device, such as a keyboard 106. The microcontroller 71, along with the microcontrollers in the other activation units, is also connected directly or wirelessly to a main controller 108.
A vision system as in
The vision system could use other means to assign weights to individual articles. For example, the positions of each of the capacitors could be marked on the conveying surface 24 or the load-cell covers 26. The mark could identify each load cell explicitly or could just be a generic position mark, such as a dot 88 (
If the articles are separated enough so that no two articles are atop the same or adjacent capacitors, the weight of each article can be determined by summing the load-cell measurements of contiguous, non-zero-reading load cells.
Although the weighing system has been described in detail with reference to a few versions, other versions are possible. For example, the conveyor belt need not be a modular plastic conveyor belt. It could be a flat belt or a slat conveyor, for instance. As another example, visioning algorithms and detectable markers on the belt other than those described could be used by the vision system to identify individual articles and the load cells underlying them. So, as these few examples suggest, the scope of the claims is not meant to be limited to the details of the exemplary versions.
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